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Building Charleston Town And Society In The Eighteenthcentury British Atlantic World Emma Hart

  • SKU: BELL-36307682
Building Charleston Town And Society In The Eighteenthcentury British Atlantic World Emma Hart
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Building Charleston Town And Society In The Eighteenthcentury British Atlantic World Emma Hart instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Virginia Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.84 MB
Pages: 288
Author: Emma Hart
ISBN: 9780813928678, 0813928672
Language: English
Year: 2009

Product desciption

Building Charleston Town And Society In The Eighteenthcentury British Atlantic World Emma Hart by Emma Hart 9780813928678, 0813928672 instant download after payment.

In the colonial era, Charleston, South Carolina, was the largest city in the American South. From 1700 to 1775 its growth rate was exceeded in the New World only by that of Philadelphia. The first comprehensive study of this crucial colonial center, Building Charleston charts the rise of one of early America's great cities, revealing its importance to the evolution of both South Carolina and the British Atlantic world during the eighteenth century.

In many of the southern colonies, plantation agriculture was the sole source of prosperity, shaping the destiny of nearly all inhabitants, both free and enslaved. The insistence of South Carolina's founders on the creation of towns, however, meant that this colony, unlike its counterparts, would also be shaped by the imperatives of urban society. In this respect, South Carolina followed developments in the rest of the eighteenth-century British Atlantic world, where towns were growing rapidly in size and influence.

At the vanguard of change, burgeoning urban spaces across the British Atlantic ushered in industrial development, consumerism, social restructuring, and a new era in political life. Charleston proved no less an engine of change for the colonial Low Country, promoting early industrialization, forging an ambitious middle class, a consumer society, and a vigorous political scene.

Bringing these previously neglected aspects of early South Carolinian society to our attention, Emma Hart challenges the popular image of the prerevolutionary South as a society completely shaped by staple agriculture. Moreover, Building Charleston places the colonial American town, for the first time, at the very heart of a transatlantic process of urban development.

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